Gripla - 20.12.2017, Page 129

Gripla - 20.12.2017, Page 129
129 but also breaking and disruptive; the negative influence between family and (future) outlaw is one of mutual destruction. thus, it emerges that the outlaw sagas are clearly focused on the various relationships inside the out- laws’ families, that the ties and tensions among relatives are just as much a concern of these narratives as are the outlaw’s adventures out in the wild. reading the Sagas through the outlaws they Bear109 If one accepts my reading of outlaws constituting a variant, an aspect, of the monstrous, this makes it possible to approach them and the way in which their entanglement in family conflict in a new and different way – as monsters, they become readable. According to Cohen, the monster is “an embodiment of a certain cultural moment”,110 incorporating the fears, desires and anxieties of that time. “the monstrous body is pure culture”,111 and this enables us to read it, for, as Musharbash notes, “monsters are always bound to specific socio-cultural contexts, and within them, signify the issue that most matters to the people they haunt.”112 thus, the monsters’ culturally specific body enables them to “offer a space where society can safely represent and address anxieties of its time.”113 A similar argument can, I argue, be made about figures who are monstrous in a behavioural rather than a corporeal way. as I have shown, the monstrously disruptive humans of the Íslendinga- sögur are social monsters, they act not only in but also against society, and society reacts to these actions. Accordingly, due to the social nature of their monstrous impact, I propose that what social monsters signify are the social concerns and anxieties haunting the culture that produced the literature in which they appear: social monsters reflect, reflect on, point towards societal concerns. this approach opens up a new reading of why the family is at the heart of the outlaw narrative that goes beyond the as- 109 a nod to Cohen’s proposal of “understanding cultures through the monsters they bear”; “Monster Culture,” 4. 110 Ibid., 4. 111 Ibid., 4. 112 Musharbash, “Introduction,” 12. 113 Marina Levina and Diem-My t. Bui, “Introduction: toward a Comprehensive Monster Theory in the 21st Century,” Monster Culture in the 21st Century: A Reader, eds. Marina Levina and Diem-My t. Bui (new York: Bloomsbury, 2013), 1. “HE HaS LonG forfEItED aLL KInSHIP tIES”
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